| Pit Schultz on Sun, 25 Feb 96 23:22 MET |
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| nettime: fucking screens - Jordan Crandall |
fucking screens
notes toward a diagram
Jordan Crandall
I am thinking about some graffiti that Warren Niesluchowski
found on a wall in Paris--VOUS ME DITES, JE T'EDITE--and an
NEC ad that I found in Newsweek (or was it Time?).
"Everything you know about multimedia is about to
change. And fast. Call it 'virtual reality' if you like,
but before long you'll actually be able to step into
magazines and other information sources. Images and words
will surround you. You'll be able to control, even touch,
what you see. Instead of simply reading or watching the
news, you'll be able to participate in events. Sound
ridiculous? Think again."
How does one respond to such an ad? Aside from the
obvious fact that the environment it describes sounds
remarkably like life as it already is, thank you very much,
and aside from the fact that the ad is evidently geared to
compel some sort of liberatory experience for a couch
potato (imagine! -- you can ACTUALLY PARTICIPATE IN
EVENTS), it is one that nonetheless invites further study,
because it clearly speaks for some curious drive in the
contemporary mind. We might call this the drive toward
editorialization.
After glancing at the collaged graphic that cascades
down the page of this advertisement and noting that it truly
sucks, one's eye is subsequently drawn to what appears to
be a surrogate reader (this could be YOU) running atop a
large field of water, carrying a burning torch, surrounded
by lines of floating text. You are to be encouraged by the
promise that someday--and fast!--you will not be left
simply reading this ad, but sucked into its very body,
gleefully sprinting over oceans and frolicking with its
cut-and-paste images and words (*and* their meanings).
Think again! While to any critical mind this would
constitute nothing less than a nightmare--one imagines, for
instance, that the sprinting reader is not gleefully
running toward the technological sublime but rather running
from it, like a frightened citizen fleeing Godzilla--it is
nonetheless easy to get momentarily swept away by the kind
of adventure it promises.
On one hand, you can choose to "step into magazines and
other information sources" in this way. On the other hand,
you can get your ass off the chair and go outside. Either
way, "images and words will surround you" and, as the ad
fails to mention, pull you in all directions by their vast
networks and the agendas to which they are harnessed. VOUS
ME DITES, JE T'EDITE. What experience is not in some way
mediated by these representational nets? Our relations are
already thoroughly *editorialized*, and instilled with the
desire toward further editorialization through ever-new
techniques.
Our relations are editorialized in two directions.
First, in our communication with others--for example, when
we state our opinions on current events or views on the
status quo either directly or in the ever-expanding variety
of media at our disposal. Second, in the ways that we are
described by, and form ourselves in relation to, the
editorializations of others--for example, when we assume a
position, such as standing for or against something, within
a normative field that has been established. The first is
an externalizing process; the second, an internalizing
process. In the internalizing process we describe
ourselves, and circumscribe ourselves, in accordance with
the bounds set forth by some entity whose agenda it is to
contour us in that way. In the externalizing process, we
speak the language set forth by that entity: we speak
within the conditions set forth by it. We mime its terms,
as "thought," and we locate our bodies and relations within
these terms, as "being" (though not in terms of "thought"
and "being," since they don't make good headlines).
Processes of editorialization--inward and outward
--weave meshes of circuits, in whose patterns we discern
publicational bodies. These publicational bodies include
both publicational forms and the various embodiments
implicated in their processes of production. (In the NEC
ad, they include the reader, the surrogate reader, the body
of the publication that carries the ad, the corporate body
of NEC, the body of the advertising agency, and so on.)
They give coherence and form to editorial processes, bound
them, establish conditions for their appearance. They
systematize them. It is the business of publicational
entities to generate the normative fields within which we
editorialize, and it is also their business to disrupt
those normative fields. The formation of bodies of
editorialized information is neither top-down nor bottom
-up, but at all points an open flow.
What stands between these internalization and
externalization processes of editorial is the interface.
The interface was once simply a page, then it was a screen,
and now it is both and more--as technologies allow multiple
windowing and extensive ad configurations that allow
intertextualities and access points between various media
manifestations. (For example, the NEC ad offers a toll
free number, a URL, and notes that "in the future, you can
just walk over.") These circuitous editorial processes
leave before-and-after-effects on interfaces like electrons
passing through screens in quantum experiments. These
traversals constitute codes.
We therefore have a diagram of these editorialization
processes, in the form of a circuit that connects bodies,
interfaces, and codes. This circuit differs from
information and network metaphors in its inclusion of
bodies--as well as multiple embodiments and their processes
of incorporation--in the textual process. It opens up a
space between codes and the interfaces on which they
appear, to allow for alternate configurations in ways that
links-and-nodes metaphors do not. The transformation of
"link" to "circuit" generally opens up new possibilities
for conduction, replacing the disembodied vectors of the
former with the traversal functions of the latter.
But wait: before I continue to lay out this diagram:
Why am I framing it in terms of editorial practices and
publishing, and not just "information"? Because the
former include social practices and group formations that
the latter "wants to be free" of. "Publishing" implies
some kind of social systematization and identification
through an erotic upload and download process that
traverses the body (through an interface). From desktop
publishing to disks to online conferences to newsgroups to
zines, e-zines, and Webzines, everyone is transformed into
a publisher simply by uploading into some larger body, some
larger system of circulation. The attraction of jacking
into a publicational body and uploading can be viewed
across the board in contemporary culture, especially in
America, where it has become a religious experience, a kind
of cosmic ascension--visible in the eyes of the talkshow
guest as s/he confesses all at the televisual confessional,
poised at the brink of salvation. There is also a process
of fixity and sedimentation at work, as the "soft" body
--primed and made all the more pliable for new techniques of
the body--downloads new identifications and group
alignments, forming communities of mind, sexual identity,
and politics. The speed of this cybersexual transloading
process, and the proliferation and fragmentation of its
forms, changes our entire experience of publication and
presence.
To consider what kinds of editorial formations and
publicational bodies are emerging in this landscape, then,
is to give insight into the kinds of group formations that
we are defining as they are defining us, and therefore the
mechanisms and agendas behind their appearance, coherence,
and modes of control. This necessitates an exploration of
the ways that such relations and forms are normalized
through various means--that is, the practices of
systematization and containment that publicational entities
register and initiate.
The call, then, is for alternate editorial formations
that disrupt and outflank these normative practices. It is
vital to realize that "normative practices" include not
only the fixed writer-reader relations of print media, but
also their variability under the marker of "interactivity."
Much of the technotopian rhetoric of the latter passes
unscrutinized as we march gleefully into our NEC ads and
into the digital future. Not only must interactive
ideologies be questioned, but also their problematic
separations of print and digital media, and their network
or web metaphors. The circuitry diagram sketched out here
offers one alternative.
By now nearly everyone has accepted the network
metaphor as the best way to visualize and map new textual
formations. Diagrams composed of lines and blocks,
indicating links and documents, illustrate the new
paradigm. However what do these links actually represent?
What is the space upon which such a diagram is composed?
Why is it so rigidly geometrical? What is the outside, the
empty space, that surrounds the text?--an unarticulated
ground, ready to bear the marks of signification? Why does
the diagram employ a modernist, bird's eye view of mapping
instead of, say, a psychogeography? Instead of dismantling
or problematizing the writer/reader division, does it not
position a new "outside"? Even in areas outside of
hypertextual studies, the network metaphor predominates,
and such questions go unheeded; for example, this metaphor
completely fails to articulate what occurs on the MOO and
it limits alternate visualizations of the Web.
What are the components of the net metaphor? First,
there is "inscription"--the linear encoding on a surface.
Second, there is an "interface"--that surface upon which an
inscription appears. Third, there is a link. But what is
a link, and what does it indicate? A direction of movement,
potentialized or performed, by some embodied agency. That
link is not only a detached vector, then, that connects
block to block, but also part of some larger circuit that
connects embodiment to text and interface. Our diagram
must then include "incorporation"--that body,
instantiation, or process of embodiment that encodes and
forms itself in relation to code. In the face of the net
metaphor, the erotic circuit posited here connects
incorporations, interfaces, and inscriptions in new
patterns, and these patterns configure through alignments
and dispersions. This diagram allows us to position the
embodied inscriber *within* the textual formation, not on
the outside of it staring at the page or monitor ("Images
and words will surround you..."), and to understand the
extent to which embodiment is a part of the textual
process, in terms other than as that appendage needed to
click a mouse or turn a page. And, as it is important to
understand that there are as many embodiments as there are
inscriptions and interfaces in a given situation, and
social elements present themselves: the textual formation
includes a practice--a social use--and a history. We are
therefore dealing with multiple configurations, not
isolated elements.
Incorporations, inscriptions, and interfaces align in
different ways to produce "fields of alignment." Such a
diagram could be mapped horizontally, in terms of
overlapping fields of alignment, which connect to you,
becoming part of the social-spatial horizon, leaving you no
distance from them. So, rather than "nodes" linked in a
web metaphor, we have fields that align and disperse in
alternate ways. There may be many advantages to seeing
textual formations in this way. It could allow us to
include its multiple forms, instead of making misleading
distinctions between media and forms of text such as
"print" and "electronic"--in fact, it allows to incorporate
corresponding formations in alternate contexts, such as
art. For "inscription" is generally the making of marks by
any means, by pen, ink, brush, or whatever, and "interface"
is generally the field on which those marks appear, whether
that be a monitor, a printed page, or the control panel of
a vacuum cleaner. Indeed, one can think of engaging a
textual formation as the performing of an activity, like
vacuuming, in a combination of signification, interface,
and body--the latter in two senses, the body of the machine
and the body of the person who performs the activity and
gives it meaning. (In the case of the virtual body in
telematic space, there is yet another body present.) It
allows us to maintain productive tensions, such as between
text and hypertext, where each realm is not parcelled out
but actively engages, and complicates, the assumptions of
the other. If this tensional space is foregrounded, as
connected through the conduit of my own bodily agency and
others and intersected through various interfaces, I resist
parcelling these elements out and locate constitutive
editorial relations within a tensional arena. The immersive
experience promised by the NEC ad becomes something far
richer, as does the process of engaging art. We find
ourselves *already within* the constructions that bid us
entry, and we understand the mechanisms through which we
are seduced to believe otherwise.
Within this schema, there are no longer solely
*representations* of artworks, but only components of the
very body of the artwork--for, as our relations become
editorialized, it is in publication-space that artwork is
formed: it is here that its coordinates are established,
and its materiality reworked.
+++
Jordan Crandall <jordan.crandall@thing.nyc.ny.us>
is the chairman of a project called BLAST:
>>Blast is not really a magazine. It comes in a box with loose
printed matter and objects, and it has neither advertising
nor subscribers. Its "content" is in flux, entering into new
relationships both inside and outside of the box, and this
"editorial" is continuously generated by a participatory
system: each participant--whether reader, author or dealer
--is actively involved in the ongoing creation of the
"content" and meaning of Blast.<<
http://artnetweb.com/artnetweb/projects/blast/blast.html
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